Saturday, April 7, 2012

Assessment in Education

Assessment is a necessity in education.  Without assessment, we cannot understand where our children are in the learning process in order to educate them appropriately.  Assessment is a set of checks and balances for student progress, teacher effectiveness, and overall classroom structure that allows for an optimum learning environment.  Assessment should be as customized as possible for each child because children all learn so differently.  Unfortunately, this is not the case.  Testing has become a game of not how smart a child is, or what they know, but of how well a teacher prepares his or her children for a test.  We are testing how well a child learns a certain way without heeding the MANY different learning styles of children. 

In the Commonwealth of Virginia, our public schools practice the Standards of Learning (SOL) system.  This is a system in which the state has standardized testing for grades 3-8 and some testing for the end of high school courses.  From the Virginia Department of Education website, I retrieved this statement: “The system [SOL testing] provides schools, school divisions and the Virginia Department of Education with critical data to inform the development and implementation of effective instructional strategies and best practices.”  Nowhere in this statement does the DOE mention the words child or learning.  I had a hard time finding these words anywhere on their website.

Ultimately, funding from the Commonwealth is dependant on how well schools perform on these tests.  Because of this, schools begin prepping their students from day one of public school life.  My co-teacher in my infant classroom used to teach 1st grade in public schools and she because so disillusioned and fed up, that this testing was one of the greatest reasons she left that job. 

Here is what she had to say about these tests:

“In order to prepare the children for these tests, the county that I taught in created assessment tests in the content areas for each grade.  So while the third graders were taking their SOL tests, all of the other grades were taking Henrico County assessment tests.  The first grade tests were multiple choice tests in Social Studies, Science, Math, and Reading.  In the areas of Social Studies and Science all of the content taught and tested was based on and built upon the content of the third grade SOL test.  From the first few weeks of school I literally had to begin teaching my children this content and model to them how to take a multiple choice test.  5 and 6 year olds.  Children who do not yet have the ability to process the several step questions that they had to answer.  Children who did not understand double negative questions.  As an adult, even I have trouble understand double negative questions.  One of the questions my children had to answer was “Which one of these is NOT a natural resource?”  Here I was trying to teach them how to take a multiple choice test and eliminate the wrong answer and I had to somehow teach this twist as well.  It was a frustrating time for me and part of the reason I made the decision to move into Early Childhood Education and work with children in a less formal setting.”

Much of the world uses this same form of testing.  When researching testing in Korean society, I was amazed at the emphasis placed on test scores.  They use a test called the College Scholastic Ability Test (CSAT) for college admissions.  Their society begins prepping children for this exam from age 4-5.  Their society revolves around this test so much that on the day of the test (the 2nd Thursday in November) government offices and public firms change their hours to reduce traffic congestion, public transportation alters its schedule to provide better for test takers, and even motorists are prohibited from honking their horns near schools.  As a result of this pressure, suicide rates for teenagers and mothers of teenagers are much higher in November and December.  Testing in America is following these patterns a little too closely for my comfort. 



References:

www.doe.virginia.gov/testing

www.korea4expats.com/article-csat-korea.html

Cindy Larsen and her blog, clynnlars.wordpress.com

5 comments:

  1. Dear Rene,

    Also in my hometown, Indonesia, there are still a lot of school, who are doing the assessment test just to show how good the teacher prepare the kids for the test. Unfortunately, I would say that we can not use the results of the test as an information about how good the children had developed.

    putri

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  2. I agree that test should be designed to accommodate children's individual learning and testing styles. I also feel it may be beneficial to develop certain parts of curriculum around children's individual interests.

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  3. Hello Rene,

    We really need to test our children to see how we can best help them. I remember trying to remember as much of the test I could so I could help the next person to take it. When I was in high school and took the SAT I remember scoring really low on math and a teacher was looking over my feed back and said someone forgot to teacher you math. I felt so bad. Bad for me and bad for all the teachers that I didn't make proud. I knew from that test I needed to stay away from math, as much as possible in college. It is sad that a first grader has to take test when they are just learning for the most part to read and understand what all the words mean. We want our children to be ready for the future but not at the cost of becoming just people that test well. Becoming proficient in reading and math is great but we don't have a magic button to make it happen at the same time.
    Resources;

    Berger,K.S. (2009). The developing person through childhood (5th ed.). New York, NY: Worth Publishers

    Feller,B. & Hefling,K. ( February 2012,9).Politics on msnbc.com Official 10 States given waivier on No Child Left Behind

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  4. Preparing students for a test can be extremely difficult and frustrating. Some children gain a great fear of tests and just shut down. Assessment is good in spurts but too much of anything can cause one problems.

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  5. Unfortunately, SOLs does not just stand for Standards of Learning, it also stands for #$*& out of Luck. Children learn at their own pace and in their own ways. Testing is very important, but we test for the wrong things and in the wrong way. Schools should be testing to see what a child does know and in such a way that their is a variety of testing types per test (i.e., multiple choice, true/false, etc.) and not just multiple guess as I like to call it. I have always been a horrible test taker when it comes to multiple choice. Give me an essay test or true/false and I am good as gold. Many of our children are much smarter than these tests lead everyone to believe. More importantly, there is much more to the world and to learn than the core topics focused upon in SOLs. Have we forgotten the need to introduce the arts to our children?

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